I somewhat agree which is why in the other threads I was fixated on if they had the tire pressure data from all the teams from all weekends prior to Baku or not. And if they "trusted" it more or less than when it suited them to do so to make or not make accusations.
I bet they have had access to all the teams tire pressure and temperature data for years.nzjrs wrote: ↑25 Jun 2021, 19:49I somewhat agree which is why in the other threads I was fixated on if they had the tire pressure data from all the teams from all weekends prior to Baku or not. And if they "trusted" it more or less than when it suited them to do so to make or not make accusations.
IMO they knew the single point pressure and temperature test in the regulations were bollocks and they knew their tires were unsafe and they took the failure of the tires in Baku to clean up their messes. Don't let a catastrophe go to waste, so goes the saying.
But then again, the alternative is that FIA tore strips off them and this is how fast one can work If made to.
Perhaps if Redbull stopped trying to cheat the regulations then these things wouldn’t need to be “nerfed”.Pyrone89 wrote: ↑24 Jun 2021, 20:39Yes, let's give Mercedes more in-season changed advantages. After nerfing pit stops and rear wingsZynerji wrote: ↑24 Jun 2021, 14:52I expected as much, but was looking on speculation on who it may help most.PhillipM wrote: ↑23 Jun 2021, 23:36Historically, higher tyre pressures has always hurt Mercs race pace more than most - I think that's a bit of why they couldn't go as long as they thought last weekend with Pirelli bringing pressures up a bit - so stronger carcasses with lower pressures may help reset the status quo again.
Handing Merc a .02s swing against RBR might just put us at hair-splitting Q3 sessions...
They knew since last year Silverstone. So yeah, it has been in the works for quite some time. Naughty teams.
I know, and they aren't adapting tech designed for 18" rims to 13" rims in a short period of time.
Exactly, now, follow this reasoning.
Maybe it was Imola last year!
There too, I agree. That was after Silverstone though so if you are just trying to put the blame at RBR you are not looking very clearly at what has been going on. But there is a problem if tires that are inflated within spec (which they were, allthough the measuring method is also not waterproof) rip long before the end of their intended life. Something that Pirelli recognizes now.
I took it as the design of the tread/sidewall interface as the only change. It might very well be just a different material insert before hitting the mold.